LAD BIBLE – Evelyn Miller, from Australia, has revealed exactly what life is like with two vaginas as a result of a condition that impacts a tiny percentage of the population.
The Brisbane native was born with Uterus Didelphys; a rare condition impacting just 0.3 percent of women.
For Evelyn, the condition means she has two fully functioning reproductive systems. That’s two vaginas, two uteruses, and two cervixes. There is only one ovary on each system.
The Aussie said it has allowed her to ‘separate the two aspects of her life’ when it comes to sex work and having a partner away from her professional life. As a result, she started using one vagina for her boyfriend and the other for sex work. [NEXT: Sex work should never be practiced]
“Otherwise, it all just ends up mashed together and having separation is really important to me,” she explained.
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That rule remains the same now that she is married to husband, Tom.
Now 31, Evelyn and Tom have two children despite her being told she would find it difficult to have kids due to the medical condition …
“Prostitution is inherently abusive”: Sex work should never be practiced, legalized, or tolerated
Why prostitution should never be legalised, by Julie Bindel
Decriminalisation of the sex trade benefits pimps and brothel-owners, not women. Abolition is the only progressive solution
THE GUARDIAN, 11 Oct 2017 – Ask the question “What should we do about prostitution?” anywhere in the world, and you are increasingly likely to get the answer: “Legalise it.”
This view is based on a belief that there will always be men who pay for sex and women who sell it.
Decriminalising all aspects of prostitution – including brothel-owning and sex-buying – will, according to this argument, make life safer for these women, and also make it easier to root out abuse.
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The position favoured by every sex trade survivor I have interviewed is: prostitution is inherently abusive.
Those in favour of decriminalisation, including many liberals and some feminists, consider prostitution to be work, and argue that “sex workers” can be protected by unions and health and safety measures.
Decriminalising the selling of sex – so that only buyers are breaking the law – means prostitutes themselves are not penalised. But even where only the buying of sex is a criminal offence, it is argued, prostituted women are forced to take risks.
In recent years this argument has made big advances. In 2000 the Netherlands made formal what had already been acceptable for some years, and lifted the ban on brothels, in effect legalising the sex trade.
Three years later the New Zealand government passed, by one vote, the New Zealand Prostitution Reform Act which decriminalised street-based prostitution and brothel-keeping.
The opposite, abolitionist position – favoured by feminists including myself, and every sex trade survivor I have interviewed – is: prostitution is inherently abusive, and a cause and a consequence of women’s inequality.
There is no way to make it safe, and it should be possible to eradicate it … READ MORE